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Recent Articles
- A Community Defined by Understanding: Learning Hebrew Structure from Nehemiah 10:29
- Following the Flow of Action: Learning Hebrew Narrative from Joshua 10:28
- When Wisdom Extends Time: The Syntax of Moral Causality in Proverbs 10:27
- Genealogies That Generate: How Qal Quietly Builds Nations in Genesis 10:26
- Rear Guard and Rhetoric: The Syntax of Order in Numbers 10:25
- “Do Not Fear”: Learning Hebrew Syntax from Isaiah 10:24
- Negation, Paralysis, and Light: Clause Structure and Contrast in Exodus 10:23
- The Grammar of Approaching Judgment: Sound, Motion, and Purpose in Jeremiah 10:22
- Marked Lineage and Grammatical Emphasis: The Syntax of Election in Genesis 10:21
- “Even in Your Thoughts”: The Subtle Hebrew Wisdom of Ecclesiastes 10:20
- The Silence of Wisdom: Verbal Restraint and Hebrew Syntax in Proverbs 10:19
- Intercession in Action: The Hebrew Flow of Exodus 10:18
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The Hebrew Verb אָשַׁם: To Be Guilty or Offend
The Hebrew verb אָשַׁם (root: א-ש-ם) carries the core meaning of “to be guilty,” “to offend,” or “to bear guilt.” It is used frequently in the Hebrew Bible in both legal and cultic contexts. This verb is particularly important in discussions of sin, responsibility, atonement, and offerings, such as the אָשָׁם (guilt offering) described in Leviticus.
In the Qal binyan, it typically denotes the state of being guilty or having incurred guilt. In some forms, it may also express passive nuance—“to become guilty.”… Learn Hebrew